tv CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell CBS June 17, 2022 3:30pm-4:00pm PDT
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captioning sponsored by cbs >> o'donnell: tonight on this friday, the new information about the americans being held as prisoners after fighting for ukraine. we talk to their families. the disturbing new video tonight of two military veterans captured on the battlefield in ukraine. our interview with the mother of one of the missing. summer travel chaos. >> it's been terrible. we're going on 14 hours now. >> o'donnell: the nightmare at airports. more than 17,000 flights canceled or delayed. the tips you should know ahead of your next trip. covid shots for kids. tonight, the long wait is over with shipments of vaccines for children as young as six months old as the f.d.a. give its stamp of approval. gun violence in america. the church potluck that turned deadly. the new information from police
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about the elderly alleged gunman. the medical debt crisis in america. more than 100 million americans are affected. what you can do to protect yourself. two men arrested after allegedly harassing a black teen and destroying the car he was driving. tonight, the new video. watergate 50 years later. cbs news looks back on the scandal that led to the downfall of a president. and "on the road" at a high school graduation that included cheers, diplomas, and plenty of tears. >> this is the "cbs evening news" with norah o'donnell, reporting from the nation's capital. >> o'donnell: good evening, and thank you for joining us on this friday night. as we come on the air tonight, the state department is scrambling for information on three americans who have gone missing in the war in ukraine. their families are anxiously awaiting any news. all three served in the u.s. military and traveled into the war zone to help the ukrainians
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fight the russians. well, today, russian media showed video of two of the men, alexander drueke and andy huynh, apparently in russian custody. but tonight, we're not going to play the audio on this video so as not to play into any propaganda. the pair vanished about a week ago in eastern ukraine, where the fighting has been brutal. russian forces are out to crush ukrainian resistance and take control of the entire donbas region. well, today, president biden says the u.s. doesn't know where the two men are and said americans should stay out of ukraine. there's a lot to get to this evening. cbs' chris livesay is going to lead us off tonight from ukraine. good evening, chris. >> reporter: good evening, norah. the kremlin says it doesn't know anything about american prisoners in russia, but members of their squadron tell us images of them in russian hands are undeniably real. they're alive, but in russian custody and forced to speak russian. a member of their squad tells
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cbs news they are 100% certain the video and this photo are real, all circulating in russian media. >> it's his body language. it's his voice. >> reporter: we spoke to the mother of alexander drueke. >> it sounds like him. it looks like him. but he did stress that if there was ever a video shown of him to not believe anything that he said, to know that he was being coerced into saying what they wanted put out. >> reporter: cbs news spoke to another american who says he fought alongside drueke and andy huynh. he asked not to be identified. >> we knew that by going over there and serving for the government of ukraine, that little-to-no protections would be extended to us, and that the united states government would be powerless to help us. >> reporter: it maybe ukraine's war-- >> wooo! >> reporter: but more and more americans are fighting in it. now a third american fighter has gone missing on the front lines.
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retired marine captain grady kurpasi, a 20-year veteran, reportedly disappeared after taking small arms fire in the kherson region. for those captured, their fate rests in the hands of russia, where lawmakers are already discussing the death penalty. if you could say anything to the people who he's with right now, what would you say? >> to treat both of the boys in humane-- give them humane treatment, and... and just, you know, take care of them. >> reporter: now, a member of their squadron tells us drueke and huynh fired on a russian vehicle the night they disappeared. that act, he says, was nothing short of heroic and probably saved the lives of everyone else there. norah. >> o'donnell: chris livesay, thank you. well, today, in alabama, we learned the sad news that a third person has died following a church shooting near birming happen ham. and we're learning more about
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the elderly suspect charged with capital murder. he's also a licensed firearm dealer. here's cbs' mark strassmann. >> active shooter incident with injuries. >> reporter: gunshots at a thursday evening potluck supper, mostly seniors sharing fellowship at st. stephen's episcopal church outside birmingham. >> an occasional attendee of the church that i will only identify as a white male was at the dinner. at some point, he produced a handgun and began shooting, striking three victims. >> reporter: local news reports say a visitor calling himself "mr. smith" sat along. longtime church member walter "bart" rainey invited him to join the group. smith declined and later handgun. led,he -year-old rainey, 75-yeld h r,nd4--o jane pounds, who died from her wounds today. suspect robert findlay smith was
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stopped when another church member hit him with a chair. >> the person that subdued him in a hero. >> reporter: coincidentally, today is the seven anniversary of the mother emmanuel church shooting in south carolina. dylan roof killed nine prisoners meeting in fellowship. the f.b.i. reports active shooter incidents jumped more than 50% from 2020, and almost 100% since 2017. public records list the suspect as a master gunsmith. not only is he in custody, but investigators have begun to search his home. they're hoping it will help explain this latest unthinkable moment of american gun violence. norah. >> o'donnell: unthinkable is right. mark strassmann, thank you. tonight we got a taste of what another presidel ld trump would look like as-f event terlounce the january 6 es mockenees.
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e ca n he suggestedhe would parn 800 rio w charfoing the u.s. capitol. cbs' scott macfarlane has the new details. >> reporter: president trump, who was furious with the testimony of his former aides at thursday's january 6 hearing, today took on defending the riotous mob that stormed the capitol, saying he'd free them if he returns to the white house. >> and if i become president some day, if i decide to do it, i will be looking at them very, very seriously for pardons, very, very seriously. >> reporter: the january 6 committee accused trump of inflaming the crowd and putting the then-vice president's life in danger after he refused trump's request to block certification of the election. despite being told it was illegal, trump still believes pence should have done it. >> mike did not have the courage to act. >> reporter: pence, a potential rival of trump's in 2024, stood by his decision. >> i'll always believe that i
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did my duty that day. >> reporter: the former president spent muc tten writing history. the attack on the capitol led to five deaths. he claimed that wasn't true, except for rioter ashli babbitt, part of the mob trying to break into the house chamber. >> nobody was killed, except for a wonderful young woman named ashli babbitt, who was viciously shot and in my opinion, for absolutely no reason, by a police officer. >> reporter: trump even claimed the crowd was unarmed. >> there were no guns. i heard they didn't have one gun. >> reporter: just today, an indiana man admitted court he carried a gun on the capitol grounds. trump used the phrase "insurrection hoax" to describe an attack that injured nearly 140 police officers and preceded a series of suicides by responding officers. a source close to the former president says trump's anger at the house hearings is prodding trump to run again. norah. >> o'donnell: scott, thank
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you. let's turn now to the travel chaos heading into the holiday weekend. airlines have canceled more than 3,000 flights and delayed another 14,000 more in the u.s. over the last two days as the summer travel season kicks into high gear. pack your patience as long lines and hours-long delays are the norm in both airports here at home and around the world. weather and staff shortages are the main cause. cbs' errol barnette is at newark where a quarter of the flights were delayed today. >> very irritated. ready to get on a plane and get to my final destination. >> reporter: from long lines at laguardia, cancellations in boston, some fliers are experiencing a painful start to the long weekend. >> i sat with four hours on the runway here. >> we have been at various airports today for over 12 hours. >> reporter: since thursday, more than 3,000 u.s. flights have been canceled, mostly due to weather, dawrving the 2,700 cut over memorial day weekend. >> we were supposed to go to
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london for a trip for my wife and i i, and now the trip is getting cut short. >> reporter: travelers in europe are also suffering with mass cancellation plaguing fliers at london's gatwick and amsterdam schipol airport which implemented limits on traffic. >> henry harteveldt said it may be months before things improve. >> i do believe that the airlines will be better staffed by the end of the year. >> reporter: transportation secretary pete buttigieg called a meeting with airline c.e.o.s thursday to ensure people get where they need to be this summer. and all this comes as average air ticket prices continue to pinch, up $100 compared to this time last year. is it fair to describe flying in america now as paying more for less? >> airlines are selling every seat they possibly can. people aren't being served as well as anybody wants, certainly not as well as passengers
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expect. >> reporter: now, with the 4th of july holiday weekend fast approaching, there is no indication we have seen the last of these mass cancellations so travel suggest protecting yourself, book direct routes, add flight insurance, and as painful as this sounds for some of us, show up at the airport an hour earlier than you're used to, norah, because commercial aviation remains as unpredictable as ever. >> o'donnell: you must know me, errol. i have trouble getting to the airport early. thank you. tonight, the youngest americans are another step closer to getting covid vaccines as soon as as next week. the f.d.a. authorized vaccines by moderna and pfizer for babies, toddlers, and preschoolers. the final decision will be made by the c.d.c., which could happen just this weekend. all right, in tonight's health watch, we will take a look at the growing scriess of medical debt in america. according to a kaiser family foundation poll, 25% of adults with medical debt owe more than
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$5,000. in a partnership with kaiser health news, cbs' anna werner takes a look at the devastate costs it's having on family. >> reporter: jim and cindy powers' medical debt struggles began in 2004 when sidney required emergency surgery to repair a life-threatening abdominal obstruction. in the hospital she contacted merc aa potentially deadly bacterial infection, leading to 18 more surgeries over five years. >> it was frightening at times because i knew of at least three times where she died on the operating table and they had to restart her heart. >> reporter: stressful enough, but then... >> the bills started piling in. >> reporter: the bills, despite having insurance, nearly $55,000 worth, and then they learned there was more. >> a quarter million dollars. >> reporter: a quarter of a million dollars. >> yeah. >> reporter: that they expected you to pay? >> absolutely. >> reporter: so in 2009, that filed for chapter 13 bankruptcy, allowing them to keep their house, or so they thought.
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four years later, the bank foreclosed on their home. >> it just kept getting worse and worse and worse. it was hopeless. >> reporter: many face similar situations. a poll by the kaiser family foundation finds in the past five years, more than half of u.s. adults have gone into debt because of medical or dental bills. nearly one in five say they don't expect to ever pay it off. >> it comes down to prices. care just costs so much more in the united states than almost anywhere else in the world. >> reporter: health policy researcher dr. aaron carroll krnd. >> there are just very few people that can pay out of pocket for medical expenses. and even with insurance, unfortunately, it can be too much of a burden for average americans, and certainly lots of americans. >> reporter: a burden cindy powers carries daily. what's it like for you? >> guilt. shame. >> reporter: shame? >> yeah. >> reporter: shame for being sick? >> yeah. because it cost us so much
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money. and so much heartache. >> reporter: but you couldn't control that. >> no. but the guilt and shame is still there. >> reporter: emotional and financial pain endured by too many. in greeley, colorado, anna werner, cbs news. >> o'donnell: well, our partners at kaiser health news have come up with some tips to help you deal with medical debt, like understand what your insurance covers. you can ask medical providers for financial assistance. never get one of those medical credit cards. and remember, you can negotiate with your medical providers. all right, well, it happened 50 years ago today, the watergate break-in that ultimately led to president richard nixon's resignation. our lesley stahl was a rookie cbs news reporter, assigned to the story, which was initially thought to be just a petty crime. >> reporter: very few news organizations thought it registered as a story at all.
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but cbs had a sort of scent about this. the assignment editor sees a break-in at the national democratic committee and he looks around the newsroom and there's no one, so he sends the new kid. >> police arrested five men in the watergate with bugging equipment and copying cameras. >> reporter: they sent me to the arraignment. as the testimony went forward, you became more and more suspicious. there were $100 bills with consecutive numbers. these guys were cubans. you kept sitting up, thinking, my, this is not just a third-rate burglary. >> o'donnell: well, there's a lot more from lesslie in a "see it now" studio special. it starts at 9:00 right here on cbs. i am watching that. still ahead on tonight's "cbs evening news." a disturbing confrontation
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caught on tape. two white men arrested for arresting a black teenager for being in their neighborhood. one prilosec otc in the morning blocks heartburn all day and all night. prilosec otc prevents excess acid production that can cause heartburn. so don't fight heartburn, block it. with prilosec otc. if you have age-related macular degeneration, so don't fight heartburn, there's only so much time before it can lead to blindness. but the areds 2 clinical study showed that a specific nutrient formula can help reduce the risk of dry amd progression.
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. >> o'donnell: high school graduation is a time to celebrate a student's accomplishments. cbs' steve hartman goes "on the road" to find that some of life's biggest lessons happen outside the classroom. >> reporter: mike and tracy thibeault always believed that time heals all wounds. but that belief faded last fall when their 18-year-old son, jake, was paralyzed in a hockey game. >> i don't know how time is
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going to take care of this, because he couldn't cut a piece of steak, couldn't sit up, couldn't, you know, put shoes on. >> reporter: plus, jake's goal in life had always been to play college hockey, and his parents couldn't imagine how long it would take him to find new purpose. they really couldn't imagine. jake had just found out he would likely never walk again when his high school principal came to visit him in the hospital here. and whether jake got caught up in the moment or was simply in denial, he made a bold prediction that day: >> i don't remember much, but i vividly remember saying to him, "i will walk at graduation." >> reporter: what was that based on? >> i have no clue, honestly. i just said it. i said, "i'm going to walk at gaduation." >> he was so positive. >> reporter: todd bland is head of the school milton academy outside of boston. >> at a moment like that you want to be encouraging. >> reporter: so he simply said, "that's wonderful, jake." >> so that just kind of became his goal. >> if i set something, i'm going
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to do what it takes to get to it. >> reporter: and from that day on, jake immersed himself in therapy, doing way more than was asked of him in the slim hope that one day he could do that walk. >> je morris thibeault. >> reporter: under his own power. >> i was so in the zone that i just kind of knot a sense like, "you can do it." >> reporter: nine months' work for 30 steps. >> and then he looks up, and he just has this huge smile on his face. >> one of the most special momenti've eveed it m garr than ever to bs. ( applause ) >> reporter: next goal: to walk without support and soon because although time may heal all wounds, jake thibeault isn't waiting. steve hartman, "on the road," in boston. >> o'donnell: we are rooting for you, jake. coming up, another golden moment
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that's nice. happy father's day to all the dads out the . i'm >> this bloody, pus-y mess is how this puppy came to me. >> judge judy: you don't know what you're doing. >> announcer: puppy problems from an inexperienced breeder. >> judge judy: you have a dog that's aggressive. it bites one of the puppies on the ear. the puppy eventually lost the ear. >> announcer: are more little dogs in danger? >> her selling them at 5 weeks old and lying to people. >> judge judy: "all these babies are now akc-registered." well, that's not true. >> announcer: "judge judy." you are about to enter the courtroom of you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. captions paid for by cbs television distribution karah albers is suing kimberly parker for breach of contract regarding the breeding of their german shepherds. >> byrd: order! all rise! your honor, this is case number 313 on the calendar in the matter of albers vs. parker. >> judge judy: thank you. >> byrd: you're welcome, judge.
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parties have been sworn in. you may be seated. folks, have a seat, please. >> judge judy: ms. albers, what do you do for a living? >> i collect ssi for heart disease. >> judge judy: and you? >> i'm a dog groomer. >> judge judy: and you also breed dogs. >> occasionally. >> judge judy: you bought a dog from ms. parker. when? >> approximately the middle of march. i responded to an ocala for sale ad. >> judge judy: and she was selling german shepherd puppies. >> not at the time. i just bought the adult female. >> judge judy: so she had an adult female for sale. >> yes, ma'am. >> judge judy: how old was the dog? >> 4. >> judge judy: and why were you selling her? >> she didn't get along with one of my other dogs, and it was creating a safety issue. >> judge judy: had you ever had a litter with her? >> no. >> judge judy: how long had you had her since she was a puppy? >> i had her about a year and a half. >> judge judy: who did you get her from? >> i got her from a breeder who had -- i believe her original story was that she had been returned. someone was going to breed her, but then they had some kind of home issues, so they returned the dog. so the woman who bred her sold her to me. >> judge judy: so you got her when she was 2 1/2. >> yes. >> judge judy: and you never bred her. >> no. >> judge judy: well, why didn't you have her neutered within the
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